Today in Apple history: Happy birthday, Steve Jobs!
On February 24, 1955, Steven Paul Jobs was born. He went on to start Apple and change tech forever. A Steve Jobs birthday recollection.
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Today in Apple history: Happy birthday, Steve Jobs!
By Luke Dormehl • 7:16 am, February 24, 2026
- Apple history
[Image: Steve Jobs-inspired art]
Steve Jobs was born on this day in 1955.
Photo: Jason Mercier
[Image: February 24: Today in Apple history: Steve Jobs birthday]
February 24, 1955: Steve Jobs is born in San Francisco. He will go on to co-found Apple and become one of the most important figures in the history of consumer technology. He’s also probably a big part of why you’re reading this website right now.
Happy birthday, Steve! Let’s take a moment to reflect on your innovation, artistry and overall brilliance.
Steve Jobs birthday: A short history of innovation
What can we say about Steve Jobs on his birthday that hasn’t been written hundreds, or thousands, of times before? His Apple co-founder, Steve Wozniak, was more like your typical geek. But Jobs’ vision of consumer technology extended far beyond catering to a select group of hacker hobbyists. He envisioned products that would appeal to virtually every person on the planet.
Jobs is one of a very small group of CEOs whose life tells the story of the personal computer’s rise to prominence. He helped oversee the growth of personal computers from homebrew kits, of which the Apple 1 was one of many examples, through the mass-market appeal of the Apple II.
His company popularized the graphical user interface and WIMP (windows, icons, mouse pointer) interface with the Macintosh, then moved on to connected web-browsing devices like the iMac, iBook and ultimately the iPhone and iPad.
That’s before you even get into his pioneering efforts at NeXT, the work at Pixar Animation Studios that made him a billionaire, the industry-changing iTunes Music Store and the iPod — any one of which would have cemented the legacy of a single entrepreneur.
Steve was an incredible leader, innovator, and friend whose world-changing ideas moved all of us forward.
Celebrating his remarkable life and legacy today, on his birthday. pic.twitter.com/ajHO2aVVlT
— Tim Cook (@tim_cook) February 24, 2026
#### Like Bill Gates, but so very different
Jobs is often paralleled with Microsoft founder Bill Gates, but they were very different individuals. Gates’ relationship with computers always seemed a means to an end. He didn’t build his own hardware. And, as Xerox PARC pioneer Alan Kay once noted, people who care about software really need to build their own hardware, too.
Microsoft’s Windows operating system, which launched a year after the Macintosh in 1985, was good in the way that a roomy family car was good. It proved functional and, provided it could get you from point A to point B without crashing, made most people happy enough.
Jobs, on the other hand, was a perfectionist for whom tech was everything. After he died in 2011, a few opinion pieces popped up noting the differences in charitable giving between Jobs and Gates. (Jobs was not a big believer in philanthropy.)
You can argue about the subject all you want. But, for me, it always seemed to sum up their differing approaches. Tech made Gates rich, and he used that to make the world a better place. For Jobs, building good tech was, in itself, about making the world a better place.
#### Steve Jobs: A natural-born artist who thought different
Steve Jobs’ methods weren’t to everyone’s liking all the time. Everyone who worked with him has a story about a withering putdown. It’s like the scene in Jaws in which the characters compare scars. But Jobs cared about what he was doing, and it showed.
The strange thing about being an “artist,” rather than just a seller of products, in the tech industry is that your creations don’t have much of a lifespan. We can enjoy a painting that’s hundreds of years old. But try working on a computer from even 20 years ago, and you’ll find parts of it unusable.
Jobs acknowledged this irony in a 1994 interview, when he was 39. “All the work that I have done in my life will be obsolete by the time I am 50,” he said.
Fortunately, he was wrong — just like he was wrong in 1985 when, depressed at turning 30, he said that no artist over that age achieved anything of lasting significance. He wasn’t often wrong in his predictions, but we’re glad he was on these occasions!
It’s easy to chuckle at the level of perfectionism that caused Jobs to (for example) demand the inside of NeXT computers be painted black, despite the fact that nobody would ever see them. But it’s also inarguable that so many of the machines he exacted his perfectionist demands upon still look impressively modern today. 2000’s Power Mac G4 Cube, we’re looking at you!
#### Happy birthday, Steve Jobs, born on February 24, 1955
Jobs fiercely controlled the Apple narrative, and sometimes received personal credit for team efforts. But he always wanted the company to not get too hung up on asking, “What would Steve do?” after he was gone. Judging by Apple’s financial success in the years since he died, Cupertino clearly learned that lesson.
But we’ll always be sad that there will never be another “one more thing” announcement from Steve.
What’s your favorite Steve Jobs memory, seven decades after he was born? Did you get the opportunity to meet him? What was his biggest contribution to the tech world? Leave your comments below.
Luke Dormehl
Luke Dormehl is a U.K.-based journalist and author, with a background working in documentary film for Channel 4 and the BBC. He is the author of The Apple Revolution and The Formula: How Algorithms Solve All Our Problems … and Create More, both published by Penguin/Random House. His tech writing has also appeared in Wired, Fast Company, Techmeme and other publications.
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[Original source](https://www.cultofmac.com/apple-history/steve-jobs-birthday)